One Stop Nature Shop Burnham Deepdale North Norfolk UK Nature and wildlife observation equipment
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The One Stop Nature Shop at Dalegate Market, Burnham Deepdale
All equipment for nature observation.
The One Stop Nature Shop stocks over 70 different models of binoculars, the largest range of microscopes of all levels in Europe, the latest in observation products such as triggered trail cameras, nestbox cameras and night vision monoculars, field equipment, magnifiers, wildlife books and guides, and also bird feeders and bird food.
For expert advice and a quite amazing range of products visit the shop at:
Dalegate Market
Burnham Deepdale,
Norfolk
PE31 8FB
The shop is open every day from 10am to 5pm (except Christmas Day)
If you aren't in the area then you can shop online -- just visit
One Stop Nature Shop - Brancaster Staithe & Burnham Deepdale Video Podcast #1
1st Brancaster Staithe & Burnham Deepdale Video Podcast featuring One Stop Nature Shop at Dalegate Market in Burnham Deepdale on the beautiful north Norfolk coast.
UK's largest selection of microscopes as well as a fully comprehensive range of binoculars and telescopes. Night Vision, Trail Cameras, Bird Feeding equipment and food, Nest Boxes Astroscopes, Wildlife Books and much much more.
The One Stop Nature Shop has it all ... if you are looking for binoculars we have 8x32, 8x42 and 10x42 roof prisms from just £49 to top off the range at £999. Telescopes for birdwatching and land use at just £159 complete with tripod and other top end makes like the Kowa 883.
Everything you can think of for microscopes from portable palm tops, biological uprights and stereo microscopes, many with the ability to add a camera and capture and view images on your home monitor.
Books have been much in demand and again we have a large selection of wildlife books and books for children with many special Christmas offers.
Many people will have seen Trail cameras used on programmes such as Autumnwatch and many of the Natuarl History films from BBC Bristol -- we have a variety of these from just £139 up to £319 for 8MP quality and a battery life of 1 year!
In fact we have so much to look at, Weather Stations, Astroscopes, Bird Feeders and Food, why not pop in and have a browse. We are open daily 10am -- 5pm everyday including Sundays and Bank Holidays.
We look forward to seeing you.
The Birds... and their garden in Burnham Market, North Norfolk
How to create a bird garden at home or How we created a bird garden at home on the north norfolk coast... so we can see birds all day, any day. We had help and advice from bird expert Richard Campey from the One Stop Nature Shop in Deepdale near Burnham Market
Music by...
Zachary David, The Great Adventure, Music Bed
Natty Reeves, Dream,
Filmed using Canon G7X, Canon 70D, Canon 70-200L 2.8 and Go Pro Hero3+ and Go Pro Hero 4
Burnham Deepdale Interview 1
With David at Burnham Deepdale in Norfolk, from manonabeach.
Norfolk Coast Path. Part 1. Hike and Wild Camp along the North Norfolk Coast.
In this video (part one in a series) I will be walking along the Norfolk Coastal Footpath, a long distance trail following the beautiful, rich coastline of North Norfolk.
Carrying everything I need and wild camping along the way, I start in the seaside town of Hunstanton, walking through salt marshes, reed beds, dunes, coastal villages and nature reserves to the village of Burnham Deepdale. I stop along the way to show you some of the features and sites of interest along this stunning and unique coastline, and give you a taste of North Norfolk. Weary after a long days walk, I set up camp in the salt marshes, have a well earned dinner and a couple of East Anglian ales before settling down for the night in my bivvy bag cocoon.
I hope you enjoy the video and thanks for watching!
Links
Peddars Way and Norfolk Coast Path (A Cicerone Guide)
Ordnance Survey Explorer Map (Norfolk Coast West)
Ordnance Survey Explorer Map (Norfolk Coast Central)
Burnham Deepdale Backpackers Hostel and Camping
Coastliner Bus Service (Lynx Buses. No. 36)
National Trail - Info on Norfolk Coast Path
Music by kind permission:
The Walk By Derek Chua
Blakeney Pt Flycatcher 26-9-10.MOV
Intrepid birders returning from successfully twitching an American Flycatcher three miles long the shingle ridge of Blakeney Point in Norfolk, England on 26th September 2010. The weather was amazing!
Brancaster beach
Victor Indi and Lily enjoying a deserted Brancaster beach
lets discover burnham
lets travel to burnham to a old village
burnham is a self-contained village in the western part of the District. Burnham Park Hall, built 25 years ago, form the social centre of the village. Many local societies, ranging from winemakers to keep-fit, meet here. It is also the home of Burnham Parish Council. The village is an ancient hamlet on the Bath Road, which may have been inhabited even before Roman times. Burnham is mentioned in the Domesday Book and in Medieval times had a market and a fair.
In The High Street are numerous 16th and 17th century buildings. A by-road leads to the 13th-century church with its array of brasses and tombs, some of which date from the 16th century. The oldest part of the building is the tower which is believed to date from about 1200. The remains of the 15th-century screen still bear traces of medieval colouring.
Burnham Abbey, founded in 1266 by Richard, Earl of Cornwall (King John's second son) stands south of the main Bath Road and is closer to Dorney Village than to Burnham. After the Dissolution, the abbey fell into ruins but it has been revived and is now the centre of a community known as 'The Sisters of the Precious Blood'. Lancet windows, early doorways and parts of the Chapter House and cloisters serve as reminders of the older foundation. Indeed, more survives of this abbey than of any other monastic institution in Buckinghamshire.
Close to Burnham Abbey is Huntercombe Manor, which is now a centre for the rehabilitation of young people who have had recourse to drugs. Although mostly of the 19th century, this Grade 1 Listed Building does contain a rather splendid 14th century beamed hall.
Adjacent to Burnham, is Hitcham whose small church has work of many styles and ages from the Norman period onwards. The brick tower is Tudor, the chancel arch is Norman and the chancel is of the 14th century. In the chancel windows is 14th-century glass showing the nine Orders of Angels and the four Evangelists. Nearby are the ancient walls and two huge iron gates which once enclosed the mansion where Sir William Clark entertained Elizabeth I the year before she died.
North of Burnham, past the golf course, is Dorneywood, an estate of 215 acres owned by the National Trust. The house (built in 1920 and containing decorations by Rex Whistler) acts as an official residence for a Minister of the Crown currently the Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott.
Adjoining Dorneywood are Burnham Beeches, the habitat of a wide section of wildlife. The Beeches have long been the rendezvous of artists, poets and country-lovers and Thomas Gray was a frequent visitor during his time at Stoke Poges. Burnham Beeches are a relic of the great primeval forest that covered much of Buckinghamshire and they form the finest woodland tract anywhere near London. In 1878, the woods - 375 acres in all - were saved from despoliation when they were purchased by the City of London and in 1921 Lord Burnham gave the 65 acres of Fleet Wood. With adjacent Dorneywood, Dropmore and Cliveden, there is thus an area of well over 1300 acres here that is preserved as a natural open space for all time.
In 1773, Sheridan brought his young bride to live at East Burnham and here too George Grote produced his first volumes of the History of Greece. He built East Burnham Park out of the profits and in this great house he finished his work and was often visited here by his friend Mendelssohn.
The one-time hamlet of Lent Rise lies to the south-west of Burnham proper, on the borders of Burnham and Taplow. The word 'Lent' comes from the Old English word meaning 'shelter'. Lent Rise was one of the many brick-making areas of South Bucks until this century. The Methodist Church in Eastfield Road (built in 1897) occupies the site where a brickworks once stood. Many of the houses in Lent Rise date from Victorian times and from the beginning of this century shops began to appear. Lent Rise is now a busy community.
Best places to check during saturday evenings check the the ye olde swan pub good for live rock bands and the bee in burnham and if you check one of the oldest pub in burnham check the garibaldi pub since 1762
Teachers TV: Brancaster Deepdale Primary, Norfolk
When Brancaster Deepdale Primary School closed, the two school buildings were made into homes. Now, more than 20 years later, former pupils and teachers gather to reminisce about their time at the Norfolk school. Their memories help to build a social history of this rugged coastal village school in the 20th Century. We hear about 1940s schoolboy pranks, evacuees from London joining classes, and how the curriculum was designed around the nature and farmland surrounding the village. Two decades later, we hear of the important part played by Honey and Muffin - the school dogs, the spectrum computer which ran on cassette tapes, and the two pot bellied stoves which took two or three days to heat up the classrooms. We also learn how the village protested against the school's closure, and the impact that was felt by the community when the school finally shut its doors in the summer of 1985. Licensed to CPD College Ltd.
1940s weekend at Deepdale Backpackers and Camping, near Wells
Norfolk Now is the YouTube channel that gives you the best local stories from across Nelson's county. Tune in for the latest videos on news, sports, food & drink, history, entertainment and more...
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NatureBreakUk.co.uk Wildlife in snow
Another video from NatureBreakUk.co.uk this time on the Lake District fells in winter talking about the wildlife
THE UNDERGROUND FOOD MARKET IS A CLEVER IDEA...!!!
THE TORONTO UNDERGROUND FOOD MARKET FESTIVAL (TUM) WAS IN PREPARATION TO BE OPENED AT 6PM ON SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 30-2012. THE PLACE WAS ALIVE, ACTIVE AND ULTIMATELY GOOD FOOD, MUSIC, DRINKS AND JOY WILL BE...!!!
Great Grey Shrike, Burnham Overy Dunes, Norfolk, 14/10/2013
RE4DINGS: Raptor by James Macdonald Lockhart
RE4DINGS [ˈri dɪŋz]: a regular video series from 4th Estate, in which our authors read 1 to 4 pages of their choice from their latest book. You heard it here first.
RAPTOR
James Macdonald Lockhart
Of all the birds of the British Isles, the raptor reigns supreme, sparking the imagination like no other. In this magnificent hymn to these beautiful animals, James Macdonald Lockhart explores all fifteen breeding birds of prey on these shores – from the hen harrier swimming over the land in the dregs of a May gale on Orkney, to the ghostly sparrowhawk displaying in the fields around his home in Warwickshire. This is a book that will change how we think of our own skies.
Read on:
London Adventure Group - Norfolk Coast Weekend
Short video of the London Adventure Group trip to Norfolk in December 2013. Scenes includes Holkham Beach, Morston Quay, Cley next the Sea and Blakeney Point
Places to see in ( Wells next the Sea - UK )
Places to see in ( Wells next the Sea - UK )
Wells-next-the-Sea is a port on the North Norfolk coast of England. The civil parish has an area of 16.31 km². Wells next the Sea is 15 miles (24 km) to the east of the resort of Hunstanton, 20 miles (32 km) to the west of Cromer, and 10 miles (16 km) north of Fakenham. The city of Norwich lies 32 miles (51 km) to the south-east. Nearby villages include Blakeney, Burnham Market, Burnham Thorpe, Holkham and Walsingham.
Wells next the Sea has long thrived as a seaport and is now also a seaside resort with a popular beach that can be reached on foot or by a narrow gauge railway that runs partway alongside the mile-long sea wall north of the harbour. The beach is known for its long flat terrain, abstract sand dunes, varied unique beach huts and a naturist area situated to the west at Holkham. A land-locked brackish pool called Abraham's Bosom is used for pleasure boating and canoeing. The beach is backed by dense pine woods which are part of the Holkham National Nature Reserve.
Wells next the Sea stretches nearly a mile inland. The majority of shops and other such businesses are now found on Staithe Street but up to the 1960s commercial premises were also to be found along High Street which continues south towards St Nicholas's Church.
A feature of Wells next the Sea is the area known as The Buttlands, a large green ringed by lime trees. Large elegant Georgian houses overlook The Buttlands, as do the Crown Hotel, Globe Inn and the Wells Catholic Church. If you exit The Buttlands down the hill at its south-west corner you can see Ware Hall, which was rebuilt over a period of years from the 1970s by Miss May Savidge, who brought it in parts when she moved from Ware in Hertfordshire.
Formerly the town was served by Wells-on-Sea railway station and was connected to the British Rail network by two lines. The line westwards towards King's Lynn was never reinstated after damage in the 1953 East Coast Floods, while the line to Norwich via Fakenham, Dereham and Wymondham was a victim of the Beeching Axe of the 1960s.
( Wells next the Sea - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Wells next the Sea . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Wells next the Sea - UK
Join us for more :
Brancaster beach
This video was uploaded from an Android phone.
Brancaster Interview 4
With Sarah at Brancaster beach in North Norfolk, from manonabeach.