Search
-
Recent Posts
Archives
Categories
- aerial views
- Allonby
- archaeology
- architecture
- art and science
- artificial reefs
- bioturbation
- coal
- coastal heritage
- conservation
- crossings & waths
- dunes
- farming
- fishing
- Foot-and-Mouth epidemic
- fortified churches
- fossils
- Found Objects
- geology
- Guest Posts
- Hadrian's Wall
- haematite
- ice
- industrial archaeology
- industrial heritage
- LIMESTONE
- limestone and drystone walls
- limestone and haematite
- limestone fossils
- limestone limekilns
- limestone pavements
- limestone rock armour
- limestone scenery
- limestone, an introduction
- Marine Conservation Zone
- mud-shrimps
- mudflats
- peat
- peat, bogs and moors
- ports
- quarries
- quicklime
- renewable energy, tide & wind
- RNLI
- rowing
- Sabellaria, honeycomb worm
- salt
- saltmarshes
- sand
- sandstone
- sea-bed & undersea
- seaweeds
- shells
- ships
- slag-banks
- smallholding
- Snippets
- Solway Viaduct & Railway
- Spring & Neap Tides
- stones
- submerged forest
- The 'Energy Coast'
- tidal bores
- tidelines
- Uncategorized
- wetlands
- Writing
Tag Archives: megaripples
The design of the Solway: an aerial perspective, part 2
September 2nd, 0845h: Andrew Lysser, pilot, aerial photographer, instructor, and owner of Cumbria Gyroplanes, and I lifted off from the runway at Carlisle airport in a silver-coloured gyroplane. This time I wasn’t nervous, and there was no wall of rain … Continue reading
Posted in aerial views, Allonby, ports, sand, sea-bed & undersea
Tagged aerial views, gyroplane, megaripples, ripples, River Eden, Romans, Sabellaria, salt-pans, sandbanks, ships, Silloth, Solway
Comments Off on The design of the Solway: an aerial perspective, part 2