Top 12 Tourist Attractions in Chichester - Travel England, United Kingdom
Top 12 Tourist Attractions and Beautiful Places in Chichester - Travel England, United Kingdom:
Chichester Cathedral, Weald & Downland Open Air Museum, Chichester Festival Theatre, Bishop's Palace Gardens, Fishbourne Roman Palace, West Dean Gardens, Kingley Vale, Cass Sculpture Foundation, Pallant House Gallery, Goodwood House, Chichester City Walls, The Novium
Countdown Winchester 2007 Promo
This is the Promo Vid for CD2007 in Winchester, UK. It took about 20-25 hours total work (at least!!) and was the 3rd reworking of the video.
2 drunks and a stepladder
Me and a friend after one to many drinks at our local pub, The Hole In The Wall Chichester. Video was filmed in the pub car park. I'm the one on top of the stepladder. This is only the short version i have been informed there is a longer version which i'm trying to get hold of.
Chichester city walls walk
Chichester city walls walk
To Fly Round The World - Alone! (1930)
Full title reads: Heston Park. To fly round the world - alone! Hon. Mrs. Victor Bruce sets off in her Blackburn 'Blue Bird' on greatest adventure yet undertaken by a woman.
Heston Park Airfield, Middlesex.
Shot of famous female aviator Hon. Mrs Bruce standing next to her 'Bluebird' aircraft.
Closer shot of her seated in cockpit talking. She appears to be using her radio. More shots of her in cockpit. She is wearing a flying helmet.
Man, presumably her husband, hands in equipment and food and drink to her. She shuts the cockpit and gives him a kiss.
Shots of the plane taking off.
N.B. The Hon Mrs Victor Bruce was, before her marriage, Mary Petre. MD.
FILM ID:743.3
A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES.
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What is BRICKEARTH? What does BRICKEARTH mean? BRICKEARTH meaning, definition & explanation
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What is BRICKEARTH? What does BRICKEARTH mean? BRICKEARTH meaning - BRICKEARTH pronunciation - BRICKEARTH definition - BRICKEARTH explanation - How to pronounce BRICKEARTH?
Source: Wikipedia.org article, adapted under license.
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Brickearth is a term originally used to describe superficial windblown deposits found in southern England. The term has been employed in English speaking regions to describe similar deposits.
Brickearths are periglacial loess, a wind-blown dust deposited under extremely cold, dry, peri- or postglacial conditions. The name arises from its early use in making house bricks, its composition being suitable for brick-making without additional material being added. Its composition also allows the clay to be fused at temperatures attainable in a wood fired kiln.
The Brickearth is normally represented on 1:50,000 solid and drift edition geological maps. In the Thames Valley area, where the Brickearth overlies some River Terrace Gravels, it has been reclassified on more recent maps as the Langley Silt Complex.
Brickearth is a superficial deposit of homogeneous loam or silt deposited during the Pleistocene geological period. Brickearth typically occurs in discontinuous spreads, across southern England and South Wales, south of a line from Pembroke in the west to Essex in the east in depths of up to a metre. Commercially useful deposits of about 2m to 4m thick are present in Kent, Hertfordshire and Hampshire, overlying chalk, Thanet Beds or London Clay. The original deposition of the sediments occurred under cold climates where fluvial out-wash sediments from glaciers were subject to windy dry periods. The exposed finer-grained sediments were picked up and transported by the wind and were deposited wherever the wind strength decreased.
There are extensive brickearth deposits in Kent, particularly on the North Downs dip slope and on the Hoo peninsula, sections of the Medway and Stour valleys. The mineral content is critical in brickmaking and requires precise proportions of chalk, clay, and iron. Brickearth requires little or no admixture of other materials to render it suitable for the manufacture of 'stock bricks'. In 1986 there were 4 active stock brick works in Kent, at Otterham Quay, Funton, Murston and Ospringe.
The brickearth gives rise to rich and fertile soils which have been exploited for agriculture. It is prone to rapid ‘collapse’ settlement when saturated with water and does not provide a firm foundation for buildings.
In Chichester, the brickearth is flinty brown silty clay up to five metres thick, which occurs on the coastal plain. The brickearth is unfossiliferous but occasionally yields man-made flint implements.
When used for brick making, it was often casually dug from small temporary holes and baked into bricks on the spot in brick clamps, and used for building nearby. The hole often remained and became a pond.
Sandy Point on Hayling Island, Chichester Harbour beach fishing mark, Hants, England, UK
Angling video guides to English South Coast shore fishing marks at:
Air Arena - Trampoline Park (Chichester)
The Pevensey Bay Beach Introduction | VLOG 423 | 12.07.19
SUMMARY
Friday.
Bar of chocolate, mug of coffee. Invigoration. Editing. Preparing the coffee table for later.
In a car park.
On the beach at Pevensey Bay I welcome all and sundry.
MUSIC
Skanada
by Text Me Records
VIDEO EDITOR
Blackmagic Design's DaVinci Resolve 16 (Beta 6)
CAMERA
Samsung Galaxy S8
Hole in the Wall pub
Lamborghini outside.
Entering Chichester priory park
Entering Chichester priory park
Chichester inn. Eviscerator.
Portsmouth Pub Run 2015
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (
Hayling Island Anti Aircraft Site
The monument, which includes a World War II Heavy Anti-aircraft (HAA) gunsite and its associated domestic camp, is situated at Sinah Common approximately 700m north of Hayling Bay. The gunsite, known as Sinah or P2 (Portsmouth 2), formed part of a chain of batteries positioned to defend the industrial and military targets of Portsmouth.
As the size and shape of Hayling Island closely resemble that of Portsmouth, the island was set up as a decoy to distract enemy aircraft from the city. In April 1941 Hayling Island received over 200 bombs and parachute mines, and the gunsite was hit directly, killing six of its crew members. The gunsite remained out of action until December 1941. It was then equipped with a GL Mk II radar and in April 1942 was amongst the first to be fitted with a paraboloid aerial replacing the Ground Laying mat.
In January 1946 the battery was selected to form part of the reduced, post-War layout known as the Nucleus Force, with its guns held in readiness off-site. The four 4.5 inch gun emplacements are situated at the western end of the site along a semicircular road with direct access from Ferry Road. They surround a control building, which has been mounded over, but which will survive as a buried feature. Sources indicate that the gun emplacements were numbered 1 to 4 from south to north. They were octagonal in shape with six ammunition recesses fitted along the concrete blast wall surrounding the holdfasts. Emplacement number 1 is well preserved, despite its southern tip subsiding into the adjacent pond as a result of quarrying. At its centre securing bolts protrude from the holdfast, while all six ammunition lockers are present, equipped with internal recesses in which wooden shelfs were fitted.
Contemporary stencilling on one of the lockers reads the angle measurement 75 degrees, indicating the position of the gun at this angle. Immediately north of emplacement number 1 is a generator room, which was damaged during the 1941 attack, leaving a large hole in the roof. Original cables remain embedded in its northern wall. Emplacements numbers 2 and 3 have been substantially altered to provide sheltered seating; the back gates have been filled, the adjoining storage bunkers were closed off, and all ammunition lockers removed. Surfaces were plastered or paved over and benches were placed along the blast walls. Emplacement number 2 was heavily damaged in 1941 and a small plaque, installed in 1994, commemorates the men of the 219 battery, 57th Heavy Anti-aircraft Regiment, who were killed in action. Emplacement number 4 was infilled in the late 1960s, but will survive as a buried feature underneath the mound.
The emplacements were served by two ammunition stores; one at the northern end of the site along Ferry Road and the other at its southern extremity near emplacement number 1. These five-bay magazines were protected within blast walls, which proved effective during the 1941 attack. Although the blast wall at the southern end of the site was damaged, the magazine remained unscathed and the glass in its windows survives. About 100m east of the magazine on Ferry Road is a red brick flat-roofed gun store, which has been refurbished with new doors, ramp, guttering and roof, and is now in use as a powerhouse. A track connects the emplacements and the domestic camp at the eastern end of the site.
The general layout of the domestic quarters is apparent from the concrete roads, which come off the main entrance at Ferry road. Along the southernmost track is a concrete standing which probably functioned as a parade ground. In the north eastern corner of the site a concrete air raid shelter is preserved, which has been bricked up. On its roof are two small domes covering air vents. The gunsite was surrounded by a fence, of which some of the original posts survive. The following items are excluded from the scheduling: all later surfaces, fences, gates and structures (including bollards, bins, interpretation boards and Pay and Display machines), and all later materials and equipments stored within the site. However, the ground beneath these features is included.
Fishbourne Roman Palace Chichester West Sussex
Fishbourne Roman Palace is one of the most popular attractions in Chichester West Sussex. We have helped countless families find their dream home so if you’re looking for property in this area then let us offer you our assistance by visiting our website.
Showstoppers comes to Petworth
Musical extravaganza at this year's Petworth Festival by the fabulous Showstoppers Improv Musical
Globalls in Brighton UK offering indoor ultraviolet crazy Golf Courses
Globalls is proud to present Brighton's very own 12 hole indoor ultraviolet crazy golf course.
Based on a Jurassic theme, players can enjoy putting amongst wonderful life size neon glowing dinosaurs and vivid wall art.
Fully Air-Conditioned, perfect for any day of the year.
Globalls
Unit 8, Ground Floor Mermaid Walk The Waterfront Brighton Marina Brighton United Kingdom BN2 5WA
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The Messiest Warehouse I've Ever Seen! | Salvage Hunters
Drew and Tee are at a furniture enthusiast's warehouse in Scotland, which is overflowing with antiques!
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153305-150243 2C79 23/03/11 Bristol Temple Meads
153305 and 150243 is seen leaving Bristol Temple Meads on the 23/03/11 with the 2C79 14:00 Cardiff Central-Taunton FGW service. This service used to be loco hauled.
Watch a Downhill Cheese-Chasing Competition in Britain | National Geographic
The Cooper’s Hill Cheese-Rolling, in Gloucestershire, UK, is an unusual—and surprisingly dangerous—annual athletic challenge.
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In the rolling countryside near Gloucester, England, stands the now-famous Cooper's Hill. One day each spring, people send large wheels of artisanal Double Gloucester cheese down the hill at speeds up to about 70 miles per hour. Chasing each wheel is a pack of contestants. Some of them roll, while others just fall over. Long a contained, local affair, over time the Cooper's Hill Cheese-Rolling and Wake (meaning festival) started drawing international crowds to watch or compete in this seriously risky game. In the May 2018 event, Chris “King of the Hill” Anderson set the all-time record, with a career total of 22 cheese wheels. Ending the day without mishaps, although the longtime cheese racer has been injured in past years. And Flo Early, winner of the 2018 women's competition, did dislocate her shoulder. No longer officially supported because of increased crowds, the cheese race continues on its own momentum.
Read more about the unusual tradition:
Watch a Downhill Cheese-Chasing Competition in Britain | National Geographic
National Geographic