Showing posts with label National Trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Trust. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 September 2010

Orford Ness - on film!

Finally I get round to it!
So about a month ago now the lovely Niall drove us both all the way across the country to Orford in Suffolk to see Orford Ness, via his parents who kindly put us up for the night & provided us with excellent picnic materials.
I expect I should probably explain what Orford Ness is (Click here for Wikipedia explanation instead.). It's a shingle spit just off the coast of Suffolk. And by just I mean just, the boat journey takes about a minute! You can see in the google map:

View Larger Map
So why did we drive all the way across the country to see an island? Well, it has an interesting history: As well as being an exciting geographical phenomenon (it's made of shingle which has many rare plants growing on it) it's got some interesting history and it shows. The whole island was acquired by the MOD years ago and used for secret military testing during WW-s I & II, lots of which involved dropping bombs on it! Later on, during the cold war, there was an Atomic Weapons Research Establishment base where detonators and bomb casings were tested. Apart from that there's the "Cobra Mist" site where experiments leading to RADAR happened. Now the BBC World Service and a Dutch station are broadcast from there.
Anyway, up until 1992 or so(?) the entire place was under the Official Secrets Act and the public didn't know what went on there. Since then it's been looked after by the National Trust, who open it to the public under the title of nature reserve! There are still restrictions on where you can go, mainly to stop you a) disturbing rare plants & destroying their habitat b) having a derelict building fall on you c) being blown up by some of the tonnes of unexploded ordnance that is probably in the midst of all that shingle! The paths are well marked...

After a 6am start & the final leg of the journey, we reached Orford, parked the car and bought our tickets in time for the 10am boat. Unfortunately they'd miscounted
and we got bumped off and onto the 10.20 boat (and called us Mr & Mrs Wold!). Oh well. The jolly boatman took us across at 10.20 and a nice lady on the other side sold us a guidebook with a map in, showed us what was open and told us about boats back; you have to get off the island by a certain time or you're stuck! The lady who sold us the tickets takes the names & phone numbers of all the visitors so they know exactly who's there.
So we set out and walked all over the place, down every possible path & around every building. The weather turned lovely and many photos were taken, by the end we were well-exercised and even slightly sunburnt!

Of course, when the sun came out so did the slide film! It's the Velvia 100F which I'd cross-processed before. Sadly it seems that my ME Super is metering oddly as all of these came out rather dark and under-exposed. Also the purple tinge is probably due to my own cack-handed scanning; I'd been taught how to scan black and white negatives and didn't think to alter the colours as I scanned my slides. Yes, I'm a n00b.

^^^^^^
The view from the bridge across the creek
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Mud by the creek with mysterious metal poking out...
Lighthouse
The lovely lovely lighthouse
Niall
Niall photographing it
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Plants growing in the shingle

Sea
The sparkly sparkly sea & shingly beach
Police Tower
The police tower, for spotting intruders!
Rusty
Some of the amazing coloured rusty metal lying around
-l
The view from one of the small buildings that now houses information

AWRE
Inside one of the AWRE buildings, water has collected in a bomb bay & the ceiling's fallen in
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Looking back out of the door
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The same building from the outside
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A plant struggling through the concrete

Reeds
In the marshes, out towards the Cobra Mist site
Derelict Toilet
A derelict toilet in the plate store, this building was falling apart in the most amazing way
Switches
Rusty crusty switches, also in the plate store

And that's all I've got. No doubt if my small camera still worked there'd be lots of awfully white balanced photos that show the general vast emptiness of the place, but there aren't!

For more information on visiting the place see the National Trust's website.
For a better (and more prolific with film) photographer's take on Orford Ness there's Niall's Orford Ness blog post.
All these photos were taken on Fuji Velvia 100F with my Pentax ME Super. For the full set at Orford Ness, see my set on Flickr.

Sunday, 1 August 2010

St Anthony Head

After St Just we decided to go out to St Anthony Head and have a little look around, then go on to St Mawes.
What we actually did was park at the wrong car park and walk for about three miles along the road and coast. Google map showing the road we walked back along.
At least walking's good for us... And maybe burnt off the ice cream?
Mapreading
Of course the time to look at the map is once you're in the tea garden, having walked a mile and a half ish...
Along The Coast
It was pretty though. (no photos of the walk out, too busy walking!)
Lighthouse
There's a lighthouse on the end of St Anthony's head. It works but you can holiday in it!
Shipping
The views are probably akin to this.
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Which is the view from this, an observation post built years ago. That and the rest of the battery are looked after by the National Trust.
P1290313
These days it's somewhat grassy. There's still plenty of heavy shipping going in and out of Falmouth, across the water.
Niall + Telescope
I don't think the telescope is original though...
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After having a good look around the end of the headland, we walked back along the road.
Yellow
And bothered the flowers.
Then we went home and roasted the lump of meat (beef I think) which we'd bought at the butchers in Twywardreath that morning. It was GOOD.

And that's the end of our Cornish adventures. I didn't really cover the first bit, but that just leaves me more photos to post when I'm short of ideas! There're notes in lots of the descriptions on Flickr.

All my Cornwall photos can be found together here, including the film ones.