Best Attractions & Things to do in Norwich, United Kingdom UK
In this video our travel specialists have listed some of the best things to do in Norwich . We have tried to do some extensive research before giving the listing of Things To Do in Norwich.
If you want Things to do List in some other area, feel free to ask us in comment box, we will try to make the video of that region also.
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List of Best Things to do in Norwich
Winbirri Vineyards
Norwich Cathedral
RAF Air Defence Radar Museum
East Ruston Old Vicarage Garden
Museum of Norwich at the Bridewell
The Broads National Park
Snetterton Circuits
Strangers' Hall Museum
The Plantation Garden
Green Pastures
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03/10/2016 Direct Rail Services Class 37/409 (Lord Hinton) at Lancaster Station
Passing through Lancaster Station on my way home from the north I had 40 minutes to change train and so took out my camera and managed to get this video of 37409 as it deaprted the station with with 2C47 from Preston to Barrow-In-Furness
For some pictures see here
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as ever copyright Simon John Jospeh Photography
BEHIND TWO TONE GREEN CLASS 47 851 AT SPEED 2 OCT 10
SCUNTHORPE TO EASTBOURNE ECML 94 MPH REACHED
East Anglia, 1950's - Film 5537
A guide to the variety of East Anglia (in England) 's geography, agriculture, industry and scenery.
Title over tractors ploughing fields. Map of lower Britain, East Anglia shaded as an area of most sunshine and least rain. Closer - East Anglia: the part known as 'High Anglia' (heavy soil formed from clay). An old fashioned tractor ploughs a muddy field. Closer, the tractor's caterpillar tracks and plough. The furrows left by the plough. On a flatter field, a tractor and seeding machine distribute seeds. A field of cereal. Another. Farm labourers work in a sugar-beet field in front of a church. Closer, a hoe working the soil. Similar. A field of barley. Closer. Wheat. A combine harvester at work. Closer as it harvests the crop. The cereal is filtered through a pipe. Chaff is deposited out of the back of the combine. Wider shot. Cereal is transferred between the combine and sacks on a lorry. A labourer fills his sack. A farmer drives a tractor pulling a cart of sacks (commentary informs us that they are filled with barley). A lorryful of barley (?) sacks drives into a brewery or farm. Huge silos where wheat is stored. A workman unloads sacks from a lorry.
Two tractors ride side by side to harvest sugar-beet. Closer - one tractor gathers the beet, and conveys it into the back of the other tractor. Where one person sorts good from bad. The tractors seen from behind. Two lorries laden with sugar-beet drive into a factory or industrial estate. A lorry tips out its bet. Trucks have poured out a small mountain of beet. Beet pulp (to be used for cattle feed) - it fills several train wagon trucks. Lorries leave the factory with sugar filled sacks. 'British Sugar Corporation' trucks with liquid sugar drive off. A cloth capped farmer loads beet waste (the leaves chopped off by the combine, to be used for animal silage). Similar.
Calves in a farm yard. A farmer shovels manure onto a horse and cart. Closer. A muck spreader showers muck over a ploughed field. Labourers pour fertiliser from sacks into old machines or contraptions for spreading. A herd of Suffolk red cows. Closer. Friesian and other cattle walk along a lane. They amble past a farmer or labourer standing by a door. A cow enters the milking shed. Milk urns on the back of a lorry. Map of East Anglia again, this time highlighting areas of sandy soil - the Brecklands and the Sandlings. An example of such countryside - once barren heathland, now areas have been taken over by the Forestry Commission. A Forestry Commission sign for 'Tunstall Forest', pine or fir trees in the background. Another sign: 'Thetford Chase'. At a plant nursery, a nurseryman rolls back covers to look at conifers growing from seed. His hand inspects the seedlings. A forest road. Two foresters saw a tree. The tree falls down. One of the men lops off small branches with an axe. A lorry laden with conifer trunks drives away. In the Sandlings area, straw is gathered in a field. A tractor and machine dispense straw bales. A tractor pulls a roller over a soil field. Similar. A field of barley. Another cereal. A labourer collects potatoes in a wire basket. Close up of the basket and its contents. A tractor pulls a machine for digging up potatoes. A similar tractor at work, in reverse, possibly in a bean field. Green beans growing. Labourers gather cut beans (leaves and stems too) onto the back of a large machine which strips and shells them before they are sent away. The beans, shelled, all into a container. Closer, a labourer with cloth cap stacks crates of beans beside the sorting machine. A conveyor belt process at a local packing plant - all women workers wearing headscarves oversee the process. A male packer puts trays of boxed beans in a lift.
Sheep graze in a dry field or marshland. Similar. A farmer directs the sheep. A sheepdog brings up the rear. The sheep follow the farmer or shepherd onto marshland. Map of East Anglia, marshland highlighted, the most extensive area being the Broads. Marshland diked and drained to provide pasture for cows. Cows walk along a dike. Others graze. A man clambers inside a huge pump at a dike. Water flows down a channel. And in a stream through the marsh. A tractor ploughs a field beside a dike. Crop fields - good arable land from marshes, compared to Dutch polders.
A canal with barge and pleasure boats. Holiday makers on a small river pier, motor and rowing boats. Families and couples aboard moored cruisers. A cruiser and small sailing boats on the Broads. More of the latter. Pier and beach with holiday makers at Hunstanton.
Specials on Sunday featuring Class 68's and Class 73's. 22/05/16.
A couple of Z's in my local area, starting off at my local location of Burbage Common for 73964 t/n/t 73962 working 1Q69 Tonbridge West Yard - Derby RTC.
Later, it was over to Atherstone for 68017 t/n/t 68016 working 5Z29 Acton Lane Reception Sidings - Crewe Carriage Sidings Northern Belle ECS.
***NOTICE*** In the first clip, as I had forgotten my tripod I had to place my camcorder onto a wooden post for support.
The day before the LAST day of class 37s from Norwich
This was my LAST trip to film them great locos working passenger trains to the seaside towns of Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft
57006 TnT 47580 on 1Z44 @ St. Bees 08-09-2012
57006 top and tail with 47580 are seen hear coming out of St Bees working 1Z44 Carlisle - Aberystwyth Statemans RailTour. 57006 is seen coming off the straight and slowing down due to temporary speed restrictions, it is then seen powering throught the curve to Nethertown...
Do you Know Norwich?- Hird's Jersey Farm
Created on April 9, 2012 using FlipShare.
189 Upper Springs Road // Stowe, VT
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Summer in Schnormeier Gardens Drone Video
Michael on common law for the freemen, Green Gathering 2011
Is he serious or is he planing a new sect? Certainly a lot of standpoints are useful
The Gosford - Taylor Wimpey Heather Gardens, Hethersett
Located in the welcoming village of Hethersett on the western outskirts of Norwich this appealing collection on 2,3,4 & 5 bedroom homes is perfect for professional and family buyers alike.
The development will consist of 95 high quality, environmentally efficient new homes and will be accessed off Colney Lane, Back Lane and Great Melton Road.There will be a mix of 2-5 bedroom homes to suit a range of purchasers with a proportion being solely provided as affordable homes for local people in housing need. The wider proposed development will have open space, play areas, a community pavilion, neighbourhood centre, allotments, new sports pitches, a site for a new school and provision for the secondary school to expand, these new facilities will benefit the whole community.
British Big Cats (Sightings)
The quaint countryside of England is where eyewitnesses claim to see giant feline beasts, also known as British Big Cats, in sightings confirmed by video evidence. Their bodies can be seven feet long, and they have proved a threat to livestock, and to man.
A million years ago, the British Isles were home to a large variety of predatory cats, including Tigers, Jaguars and Pumas. Ten thousand years past, leopards and lions were common, as well as the Lynx, which according to radiocarbon dating, hunted here in the forest, and on the moor, as recently as the fifth century. This could only explain the anomalous big cats roaming the UK, if a breeding population of these animals was successful in surviving to the present day.
Or was the breeding population established by the British themselves? In the nineteen sixties and seventies, it was a sign of prestige to own a large exotic cat, and they could be kept as pets in Britain without regulation. This changed in 1976, when the government signed into law, the Dangerous Wild Animals Act, which required owners to license their exotic pets, and have their animals covered by liability insurance, at a combined cost, of several thousand pounds.
But there was a loophole in the law. There was no prohibition against the release of pets into the wild. Instead of following regulations, some owners of big cats have freely confessed, they set their dangerous pets free, in the countryside. If the number of released pets were large enough to create a breeding pool, this would explain the evidence of giant felines in the wild.
This is not the conspiracy theory you might suspect. There are many cases where big cats were found. In 1980, following several years of sightings of a big cat, with a sandy coat, a Puma was trapped in Inverness. In 1989, a jungle cat was found on the side of a road in Shropshire. In 1991, after the disappearance of fifteen sheep within two weeks, a Lynx was captured in Norwich. In 1994, a Leopard which was fond of hunting chickens and ducks, was taken on the Isle of Wight. In 2001, following a chase by veterinarians and the police, across school playing fields and between blocks of apartments, a Lynx was caught in the suburbs of London.
In the 1980's, the farmers of North Devon lost over 200 head of livestock, mostly sheep, to a mysterious predator they call the Beast of Exmoor. When the farmers started losing their lambs, the Dulverton West Foxhounds were called in, to see if they could track down the culprit. They failed, as the hounds, which were bred to pursue foxes, declined to follow the scent of a feline. The locals soon became so fearful of the beast, that the government sent in sharpshooters from the Royal Marines, to find the predator, before it could threaten the lives of children. The exercise was called Operation Beastie, with sharpshooters scouring the village and surrounding hills, dispersed throughout pastures and fields, in search of the creature. Some of the snipers claim to have fleetingly seen the beast, but none quick enough to get off a shot. Their commanding officer, said that the quarry behaved with high, almost human, intelligence, always moving with surrounding cover amongst hedges and woods. During the operation there were no reported attacks on livestock. After the Royal Marines were recalled from the field, the beast resumed its stalking of sheep.
One could not provide a better environment for large predatory felines than the British Isles... temperate climate, combined with an abundance of prey. Over two thousand sightings were reported last year. Officially, the government denies the existence of anomalous big cats, perhaps because it is so difficult to find and eliminate them. Of all dangerous predators, the feline is the most likely, and best able, to hide itself in the wild.
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DRS Class 57 no: 57002 @ Chepstow {5Z28} 10/02/2019.
DRS Class 57 no: 57002 @ Chepstow {5Z28} 10/02/2019.
548Y 1415 Pengam Sdgs to Burton Ot Wetmore Sdgs.
Diesel locomotive, trailing load 455 tonnes.
57002,6051,5998,6024,5929,5961,1200,
1657,3304,3364,3314,3333,3356,17105.
The Natural Environment of Tudor London
This lecture offers a 'virtual walk' around the City of London with Sir Thomas Gresham, evaluation the City's air, water, soil and wildlife at that time.
A lecture by Carolyn Roberts, Emerita Professor of the Environment 10 April 2019
Tudor London is variously reported as a squalid seething mass of humanity choking on its own filth and fumes, and as a delightful garden where babbling brooks and sweet flowers delighted the senses of people such as Elizabeth I, Shakespeare and Erasmus.
Drawing on evidence from contemporary maps, paintings and writings, and modern environmental science, the lecture will offer a 'virtual' walk around the City with Sir Thomas Gresham, evaluating these different perspectives on the City’s air, water, soil and wildlife.
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FIRST TIME MEETING A CARABAO Philippines Adventure | Vlog
My dream became true when I finally met a real life carabao (buffalo) in the Philippines! It was so nice to experience the life of the local people.
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What happens to carbon in the soil after biochar is applied?
This webinar explores the interesting dynamics at play with soil carbon and added biochar. Han received the prize for the best presentation by an under 35 year old for this presentation at the recent National Soil Science Conference held in Melbourne in November 2014.
73201 + 73141 @ Ramsgate with2 tone on Entry and tone on departure plus a look in the cab 19/2/16
GBRf 73201 + 73141 at Ramsgate with tones and a look in the cab thanks to a great driver.
Cheers driver for the tones and the look in the cab :)
The Ultimate guide....An introduction to the history of East Anglia
A brief introduction to East Anglia, Ely and Christendom. The introduction from the wonderful series narrated so beautifully and knowledgeably by Dr. Ben Jarman Tebbut.
Norwich Sloughbottom park Sledge Day pt2
Mad Snow Day Sledging with all of us making the Snow Sledge Train !
watch us Sledge Ski ( and Fail ! )