So here we are up close and personal with the indispensable tidal surge barrier. Since it was built in 1980 it has saved the city from flooding thirty times, roughly once a year. It was refurbished at a cost of £10 million a couple of years back, but that's money well spent considering that a year ago it stopped a 16ft high tide from engulfing the city centre. So a big hat tip the engineers who designed and built this 98ft, 212tonne beauty.
Friday, 2 November 2012
Thursday, 1 November 2012
The Water's Edge
Bridlington's south shore at low tide is a good place to spot some wading birds.
This month's theme is 'the water's edge'. Find what others have made of this at the new CDPB monthly theme page here.
Wednesday, 31 October 2012
Tuesday, 30 October 2012
Angelic
Spring Bank Cemetery has a few angel tombstones, sadly many of them have been damaged by the elements or plain old vandalism. This one seems intact. It is the grave of one Wilfred Jessop (d 1930), his wife Isabella Maud (d 1924) and his mother-in-law, Jane Hooper (d 1914). I can find nothing about these people but I'm assuming they had money, monuments like this were not and are not cheap.
There similar posts over at Taphophile Tragics.
Monday, 29 October 2012
Opulent Autumn Cemetery
You don't have to be a
lover of graveyards to appreciate the glories of Spring Bank Cemetery.
At this time of year it's looks spectacular.
The cemetery is on the Larkin Trail. Philip Larkin described it as the most beautiful place in Hull and for
once I could almost agree. In defending the cemetery against
"improvement" in the late 70s he said it was a "natural cathedral, an
inimitable blended
growth of nature and humanity of over a century; something that no
other town could create whatever its resources". I think he might just be guilty of exaggeration.
Sunday, 28 October 2012
1912
The immature gull on the right has just been given a hard lesson that the free lunch is no longer available, I expect he'll survive. There's no shortage of gulls round these parts. The stonework is the top of the facade of Bridlington station.
See more of the Weekend in Black and White here.
Saturday, 27 October 2012
Barmston Drain
The Beverley and Barmston drain to give it its full name drains the land between Beverley and Driffield and runs to the west of the river Hull joining it just before the mouth of the river. The pictures here are from the stretch near Sculcotes Lane in Hull. It's pleasant enough now with a tarmac footpath, almost civilised, but when the gas works and electricty power station were operating up to the 1960s the drain was used for cooling the plant and waste hot water was pumped back into the drain making it steaming and polluted. Houses backed on to the drain it was all very Dickensian. Here's Philip Larkin in 1964 having a stroll by the drain while reading one of his more depressing verses.
Now the drain is crystal clear and well stocked with fish and there's abundant wildlife. Of course where there's drains there's rats.
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