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Showing results for tags 'moss'.
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The Longmoor Military Railway was an extensive military railway system around the Bordon area of Hampshire until the late 1960s and early 1970s. Before the main railway was built, an old narrow gauge line used to exist for moving military equipment, but this was lifted over 120 x years ago. This is one of the old narrow gauge rails abandoned at that time which is shown by the tree has actually grown around the rail!
© Tim Penycate
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From the album: Out and about in Somerset
Photographed in the cutting leading up to the Southern portal of the Shute Shelve Tunnel on the old Strawberry Line trail in Somerset.-
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- shute shelve hill
- railway tunnel
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Shute Shelve Tunnel North Portal - Going in!
smb posted a gallery image in Members Albums - Index Page
From the album: Out and about in Somerset
Wonderful old tunnel on the Strawberry Line trail in Somerset, South West England. This is the North Portal, covered in a wonderful growth of moss, ferns and 'all sorts' of other plants. Here you go...You can sign the petition, if you want! http://www.thestrawberryline.org.uk/index.php -
Mosses and Ivy dripping with water outside the Northern end of Shute Shelve Tunnel
smb posted a gallery image in Members Albums - Index Page
From the album: Out and about in Somerset
Shute Shelve Hill is one of the Mendip Hills of Somerset, SW England. The old Strawberry Line Railway ran through a tunnel, whilst the modern A38 road was constructed through a series of cuttings in the same area.-
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- dripping with water
- ivy
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From the album: ART PHOTO - WAAJ
Fungi, moss and some oak leaves on an old tree stump in an oak tree woodland.© free
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Sandstone embankment with mosses and lichen
smb posted a gallery image in Members Albums - Index Page
From the album: The statues: Hogmoor Inclosure photos
A kaleidoscope of colour! An old sandstone embankment where, after years of Army tanks driving past on their training missions, a deep passage has been carved through some slightly elevated ground. I find the sheer variety of mosses and lichens that now cover these banks to be absolutely fascinating - especially when you look at them in close-up detail. The Hogmoor Enclosure nature reserve in Hampshire, South of England.